• UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Does “Do the least harm” just not apply in some situations?

    I think its a fundamentally false choice. People get bound up in the moral weight of their vote, when they spend an hour or two making the decision every 2-4 years. Then they spend 2080 man hrs+ / year working for an employer and god knows how many hours engaging in consumerist behaviors which plays a drastically more meaningful impact on the political and social economy of their neighborhood than the weight of their votes.

    A Harris guy working for Raytheon has more blood on their hands than a thousand Trump voters who work construction or do email jobs. A postal worker doing the yeoman’s work of processing all those mail-in ballots has more consequence to their community than a dozen canvassers trying to GOTV. A gym teacher making off-color jokes about LGBTQ students in the locker room is going to weigh heavier on civil rights than a hundred ACT BLUE donators.

    If I travel to the edge of the middle east and someone wants to kill me

    After all the bombings and killings we’ve done in the Middle East, you’re less likely to be murdered by an angry local dissident than to die of cholera or dysentery because the place you landed has no access to safe drinking water.

    it feels like l’m being told to shoot an innocent or maybe get shot myself.

    You’re being told to feel complicit in a system that’s totally outside your control, while being hoodwinked into participating in systems within your control without thinking about what you’re really doing.

    • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      Moral weight isnt absolute. Just because you don’t put much weight on what america and by extension its citizens is participating in, does not mean everyone else should. Its interesting you assume someone who’s concerned about minimizing harm would even consider working for Raytheon to begin with.

      You also described the palestinian genocide as a system outside our control, which you’d really need to elaborate on. Why are google employees quitting over their assistance of israel in genocide?

      The argument that if a vote doesnt end up going to one of the two most likely candidates, that its the same as going to one of them anyways makes no sense. Why anyone would count votes they didnt get is beyond me.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Just because you don’t put much weight on what america and by extension its citizens is participating in

        I do put weight on it. I simply ascribe that weight to their lifelong careers rather than their fleeting political selections.

        The argument that if a vote doesnt end up going to one of the two most likely candidates, that its the same as going to one of them anyways makes no sense.

        I agree. But then I’d argue individual votes, even whole elections, don’t matter much in a heavily privatized economy.

        • Rekorse@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          The only issue I have is that not everyone is lifelong careers deep into all of this. Some people have made good attempts to minimize their harm while taking care of themselves and their families.

          You make it sound like the average american has been working for the military industrial complex for 25+ years.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            You make it sound like the average american has been working for the military industrial complex for 25+ years.

            Hardly the average American. But the average rich American? Much closer to the mark.